This Provisional PDF corresponds to the article as it appeared upon acceptance. Fully formatted PDF and full text (HTML) versions will be made available soon. Random approximation with weak contraction random operators and a random fixed point theorem for nonexpansive random self-mappings Journal of Inequalities and Applications 2012, 2012:16 doi:10.1186/1029-242X-2012-16 Suhong Li (lisuhong103@126.com) Xin Xiao (xinxiao@163.com) Lihua Li (lilihua103@eyou.com) Jinfeng Lv (ljf@126.com) ISSN 1029-242X Article type Research Submission date 9 June 2011 Acceptance date 19 January 2012 Publication date 19 January 2012 Article URL http://www.journalofinequalitiesandapplications.com/content/2012/1/16 This peer-reviewed article was published immediately upon acceptance. It can be downloaded, printed and distributed freely for any purposes (see copyright notice below). 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Random approximation with weak contrac- tion random operators and a random fixed point theorem for nonexpansive random self- mappings Suhong Li 1∗,2 , Xin Xiao 1 , Lihua Li 1 and Jinfeng Lv 1 1 College of Mathematics and Information Technology, Hebei Normal University of Science and Technology, Qinhuangdao Hebei 066004, China 2 Institute of Mathematics and Systems Science, Hebei Normal University of Science and Technology, Qinhuangdao Hebei 066004, China ∗ Correspondingauthor: lisuhong103@126.com Email address: XX: xinxiao@163.com LL: lilihua103@eyou.com JL: ljf@126.com 1 Abstract In real reflexive separable Banach space which admits a weakly sequentially continu- ous duality mapping, the sufficient and necessary conditions that nonexpansive ran- dom self-mapping has a random fixed point are obtained. By introducing a random iteration process with weak contraction random operator, we obtain a convergence theorem of the random iteration process to a random fixed point for nonexpansive random self-mappings. 1 Introduction Random nonlinear analysis is an important mathematical discipline which is mainly concerned with the study of random nonlinear operators and their prop- erties and is much needed for the study of various classes of random equations. Random techniques have been crucial in diverse areas from puremathematics to applied sciences. Of course famously random methods have revolutionised the financial markets. Random fixed point theorems for random contraction mappings on separable complete metric spaces were first proved by Spacek [1]. The survey article by Bharucha-Reid [2] in 1976 attracted the attention of sev- eral mathematician and gave wings to this theory. Itoh [3] extended Spacek’s theorem to multivalued contraction mappings. Now this theory has become the full fledged research area and various ideas associated with random fixed point theory are used to obtain the solution of nonlinear random system (see [4]). Re- cently Beg [5,6], Beg and Shahzad [7] and many other authors have studied the fixed points of random maps. Choudhury [8], Park [9], Schu [10], and Choud- 2 hury and Ray [11] had used different iteration processes to obtain fixed points in deterministic operator theory. In this article, we study a random iteration process with weak contraction random operator and obtain the convergence the- orem of the random iteration process to a random fixed point for nonexpansive random self-mapping. Our main results are the randomizations of most of the results of the recent articles by Song and Yang [12], Song and Chen [13], and Xu [14]. In particular these results extend the corresponding results of Beg and Abbas [15]. 2 Preliminaries Let X be Banach space, we denote its norm by · and its dual space by X ∗ . The value of x ∗ ∈ X ∗ at y ∈ X is denoted by y, x ∗ , and the normalized duality mapping from X into 2 X ∗ is denoted by J, that is, J(x) = {f ∈ X ∗ : x, f = xf, x = f }, for all x ∈ X. A Banach space X is said to be (i) strictly convex if x = y = 1, x = y implies x+y 2 < 1; (ii) unif ormly convex if for all ε ∈ [0, 2], there exists δ ε > 0 such that x = y = 1 with x − y ≥ ε implies x+y 2 < 1 − δ ε . It is well known that each uniformly convex Banach space X is reflexive and strictly convex. Typical examples of both uniformly convex and uniformly smooth Banach spaces are L p spaces, where p > 1. Recall that J is said to be weakly sequentially continuous, if for each {x n } ⊂ X with x n x, then J(x n ) ∗ J(x). Recall that a Banach space X is said to satisfy Opial s condition if, for any {x n } ⊂ X with x n x, the following inequality holds: lim inf n→∞ x n − x < lim inf n→∞ x n − y 3 for y ∈ X with y = x. It is well known that the above inequality is equivalent to lim sup n→∞ x n − x < lim sup n→∞ x n − y for y ∈ X with y = x. It is well known that all Hilbert spaces and l p (p > 1) spaces satisfy Opial’s condition, while L p spaces does not unless p = 2. Remark 2.1. If X admits a weakly sequentially continuous duality mapping, then X satisfies Opial’s condition, and X is smooth, for the details, see [16]. Let (Ω, Σ) be a measurable space (Σ-sigma algebra) and F be a nonempty subset of a Banach space X. A mapping ξ : Ω → X is measurable if ξ −1 (U) ∈ Σ for each open subset U of X. The mapping T : Ω × F → F is a random map if and only if for each fixed x ∈ F , the mapping T (·, x) : Ω → F is measurable, and it is continuous if for each ω ∈ Ω, the mapping T (ω, ·) : F → X is continuous. A measurable mapping ξ : Ω → X is the random fixed point of the random map T : Ω × F → X if and only if T (ω, ξ(ω)) = ξ(ω), for each ω ∈ Ω. Throughout this article, we denote the set of all random fixed points of random mapping T by RF (T ), the set of all fixed points of T (ω, ·) by F(T (ω, ·)) for each ω ∈ Ω, respectively. Definition 2.1. Let F be a nonempty subset of a separable Banach space X and T : Ω × F → F be a random map. The map T is said to be: (a) weakly contractive random operator if for arbitrary x, y ∈ F , T (ω, x) − T (ω, y) ≤ x − y − ϕ(x − y) for each ω ∈ Ω, where ϕ : [0, ∞) → [0, ∞) is a continuous and nondecreasing map such that ϕ(0) = 0, and lim t→∞ ϕ(t) = ∞. (b) nonexpansive random operator if for each ω ∈ Ω, such that for arbitrary 4 x, y ∈ F we have T (ω, x) − T (ω, y) ≤ x − y (c) completely continuous random operator if the sequence {x n } in F con- verges weakly to x 0 implies that {T (ω, x n )} converges strongly to T (ω , x 0 ) for each ω ∈ Ω. (d) demiclosed random operator (at y) if {x n } and {y n } are two sequences such that T (ω, x n ) = y n and {x n } converges weakly to x and {T (ω, x n )} con- verges to y imply that x ∈ F and T (ω, x) = y, for each ω ∈ Ω. Definition 2.2. Let T : Ω × F → F be a nonexpansive random operator, f : Ω × F → F be a weakly contractive random operator, F is a nonempty convex subset of a separable Banach space X. For each t ∈ (0, 1), the random iteration scheme with weakly contractive random operator is defined by ξ t (ω) = (1 − t)f(w, ξ t (ω)) + tT (ω, ξ t (ω)) for each ω ∈ Ω. Since F is a convex set, it follows that for each t ∈ (0, 1), ξ t is a mapping from Ω to F . Remark 2.2. Let F be a closed and convex subset of a separable Banach space X and the random iteration scheme {ξ t } defined as in Definition 2.2 is pointwise convergent, that is, ξ t (ω) → q := ξ(ω) for each ω ∈ Ω. Then closedness of F implies ξ is a mapping from Ω to F . Since F is a subset of a separable Banach space X, so, if T is a continuous random operator then by [17, Lemma 8.2.3], the map ω → T (ω, f(ω)) is a measurable function for any measurable function f from Ω to F . Thus {ξ t } is measurable. Hence ξ : Ω → F , being the limit of {ξ t }, is also measurable. Lemma 2.1.( [15]). Let F be a closed and convex subset of a complete separable metric space X, and T : Ω × F → F be a weakly contractive random operator. Then T has unique random fixed point. 5 Lemma 2.2. Let X be a real reflexive separable Banach space which satisfies Opial’s condition. Let K be a nonempty closed convex subset of X, and T : Ω × K → K is nonexpansive random mapping. Then, I − T is demiclosed at zero. Proof From Zhou [18], it is easy to imply the conclusion of Lemma 2.2 is valid. 3 Main results Theorem 3.1 Let X be a real reflexive separable Banach space which admits a weakly sequentially continuous duality mapping from X to X ∗ , and K be a nonempty closed convex subset of X. Suppose that T : Ω × K → K is nonexpansive random mapping and f : Ω × K → K is a weakly contractive random mapping with a function ϕ, then (i) for each t ∈ (0, 1), there exists a unique measurable mapping ξ t from Ω into X such that ξ t (ω) = tf(ω, ξ t (ω)) + (1 − t)T (ω, ξ t (ω)) for each ω ∈ Ω. (ii) T has a random fixed point if and only if {ξ t (ω)} is bounded as t → 0 for each ω ∈ Ω. In this case, {ξ t } converges strongly to some random fixed point ξ ∗ of T such that ξ ∗ is the unique random solution in RF (T ) to the following variational random inequality: (f −I)(w, ξ ∗ (ω)), j(ξ(w)−ξ ∗ (ω)) ≤ 0, for all ξ ∈ RF (T ) and each ω ∈ Ω. (3.1) Proof For each t ∈ (0, 1), we define a random mapping S t : Ω × K → K by S t (ω, x) = tf(ω, x) + (1 − t)T (ω, x) for each (ω, x) ∈ Ω × K, then for any 6 x, y ∈ K and each ω ∈ Ω, and ψ(·) = tϕ(·) we have S t (ω, x) − S t (ω, y) ≤ tf (ω, x) − f (ω, y) + (1 − t)T (ω, x) − T (ω, y) ≤ tx − y + (1 − t)x − y − tϕ(x − y) = x − y − tϕ(x − y) = x − y − ψ(x − y) Thus, S t : Ω × K → K is a weakly contractive random mapping with a function ψ, it follows from Lemma 2.1 that there exists a unique random fixed point of S t , say ξ t such that for each ω ∈ Ω, ξ t (ω) = tf(ω, ξ t (ω)) + (1 − t)T (ω, ξ t (ω)) (3.2) This completes the proof of (i). Next we shall show the uniqueness of the random solution of the variational random inequality (3.1) in RF (T ). In fact, suppose ξ 1 (ω), ξ 2 (ω) ∈ RF (T ) satisfy (3.1), we see that (f − I)(ω, ξ 1 (ω)), j(ξ 2 (ω) − ξ 1 (ω)) ≤ 0 (3.3) (f − I)(ω, ξ 2 (ω)), j(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) ≤ 0 (3.4) for each ω ∈ Ω. Adding (3.3) and (3.4) up, we have that 0 ≥ (I − f )(ω, ξ 1 (ω)) − (f − I)(ω, ξ 2 (ω)), j(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) = ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω), j(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) − f(ω, ξ 1 (ω)) − f(ω, ξ 2 (ω)), j(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) ≥ ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω) 2 − ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω) 2 + ϕ(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω))ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω) Thus putting φ(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) = ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)ϕ(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)), we have φ(ξ 1 (ω) − ξ 2 (ω)) ≤ 0 7 for each ω ∈ Ω. By the property of φ, we obtain that ξ 1 (ω) = ξ 2 (ω) for each ω ∈ Ω and the uniqueness is proved. (ii) Let ξ : Ω → F b e the random fixed point of T , then we have from (3.2) that ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) 2 = ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) ≤ tf (ω, ξ t (ω)) − f(ω, ξ(ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) +tf(ω, ξ(ω)) − ξ(ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) +(1 − t)T (ω, ξ t (ω)) − ξ(ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) ≤ ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) + tf (ω, ξ(ω)) − ξ(ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) −tϕ(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω))ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) ≤ ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) 2 + tf(ω , ξ(ω)) − ξ(ω)ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) −tϕ(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω))ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) (3.5) Therefore, ϕ(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) ≤ f (ω, ξ(ω)) − ξ(ω) for each ω ∈ Ω, which implies that {ϕ(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω))} is bounded for each ω ∈ Ω. It further implies {ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)} is bounded by the property of ϕ for each ω ∈ Ω. So {ξ t (ω)} is bounded for each ω ∈ Ω. On the other hand, suppose that {ξ t (ω)} is bounded for each ω ∈ Ω, and hence {T (ω, ξ t (ω))} is bounded for each ω ∈ Ω. By (3.2), we have that f(ω, ξ t (ω)) ≤ 1 t ξ t (ω) + 1−t t T (ω, ξ t (ω)) ≤ max{sup t∈(0,1) ξ t (ω), sup t∈(0,1) T (ω, ξ t (ω))} for each ω ∈ Ω. Thus {f(ω, ξ t (ω))} is bounded for each ω ∈ Ω. Using t → 0, this implies that T (ω, ξ t (ω)) − ξ t (ω) ≤ t 1 − t ξ t (ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)) → 0 8 for each ω ∈ Ω. By reflexivity of X and boundedness of {ξ t (ω)}, there exists {ξ t n (ω)} ⊂ {ξ t (ω)} such that ξ t n (ω) ξ ∗ (ω) (n → ∞) for each ω ∈ Ω. Taken together with Banach space X with a weakly sequentially continuous duality mapping satisfying Opial’s condition [16, Theorem 1], it follows from Lemma 2.2 that ξ ∗ ∈ RF (T). Therefore RF (T ) = ∅. Furthermore, in (3.5), interchange ξ(ω) and ξ ∗ (ω) to obtain ϕ(ξ t n (ω) − ξ ∗ (ω)) ≤ f(ω , ξ ∗ (ω)), j(ξ t n (ω) − ξ ∗ (ω)) Using that the duality map J is single-valued and weakly sequentially continuous from X to X ∗ , we get that 0 ≤ lim sup n→∞ ϕ(ξ t n (ω) − ξ ∗ (ω)) ≤ 0 and hence, lim n→∞ ϕ(ξ t n (ω) − ξ ∗ (ω)) = 0, for each ω ∈ Ω, by the property of ϕ, {ξ t n } strongly converges to ξ ∗ ∈ RF (T). Next we show that ξ ∗ : Ω → F is a random solution in RF (T ) to the variational random inequality (3.1). In fact, for any ξ : Ω → F ∈ RF (T), we have from (3.2), ξ t (ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) = (1 − t)T (ω, ξ t (ω)) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) = (1 − t)T (ω, ξ t (ω)) − ξ(ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) +(1 − t)ξ(ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) ≤ (1 − t)ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω) 2 + (1 − t)ξ(ω) − ξ t (ω), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) +(1 − t)ξ t (ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) = (1 − t)ξ t (ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) for each ω ∈ Ω. Therefore, ξ t (ω) − f(ω, ξ t (ω)), j(ξ t (ω) − ξ(ω)) ≤ 0 (3.6) 9 [...]... 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Iterative construction of fixed points of strictly quasicontractive mappings Appl Anal 40, 67–72 (1991) 12 11 Choudhury, BS, Ray, M: Convergence of an iteration leading to a solution of a random operator equation J Appl Math Stochastic Anal 12, 161–168 (1999) 12 Song, YS, Yang, CS: Solving variational inequality with weak contraction using viscosity approximation methods Acta Math Sci 29, 656–668 (2009)... the article SL was supported by the Natural Science Foundational Committee of Hebei Province (Z2011113) 11 References 1 Spacek, A: Zufallige gleichungen Czechoslovak Math J 5, 462–466 (1955) 2 Bharucha-Reid, AT: Fixed point theorems in probabilistic analysis Bull Am Math Soc 82, 641–657 (1976) 3 Itoh, S: Random fixed point theorems with an application to random differential equations in Banach spaces... that ξt (ω) = tf (ω, ξt (ω)) + (1 − t)T (ω, ξt (ω)) for each ω ∈ Ω (ii) T has a random fixed point if and only if {ξt (ω)} is bounded as t → 0 for each ω ∈ Ω In this case, {ξt } converges strongly to some random fixed point 10 ξ ∗ of T such that ξ ∗ is the unique random solution in RF (T ) to the variational random inequality (3.1) Corollary 3.2 Let X, K, T be as in Theorem 3.1, for any given measurable... (ω) for each ω ∈ Ω Suppose that there exists another subsequence of functions {ξtk (ω)} such that ξtk (ω) η ∗ (ω) as tk → 0 for each ω ∈ Ω Then we also have η ∗ ∈ RF (T ) and η ∗ is a random solution of the variational random inequality (3.1) Hence, η ∗ (ω) = ξ ∗ (ω) by uniqueness for each ω ∈ Ω Therefore, ξt → ξ ∗ as t → 0 This complete the proof of (ii) Remark 3.1 The above theorem is a randomization... results by Song and Yang [12], Song and Chen [13] In particular this result extends the corresponding result of Beg and Abbas [15] As some Corollaries of the above theorem, we now obtain a random version of the results given in Xu [14] Corollary 3.1 Let X, K, T be as in Theorem 3.1, f : Ω × K → K is a contractive random mapping, then (i) for each t ∈ (0, 1), there exists a unique measurable mapping ξt from... variational random inequality (3.1) Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests Authors’ contributions SL and XX carried out the proof of convergence of the theorems LL and JL carried out the check of the manuscript All authors read and approved the final manuscript Acknowledgements The authors were grateful to the anonymous referees for their precise remarks and suggestions... mapping ξ : Ω → K, then (i) for each t ∈ (0, 1), there exists a unique measurable mapping ξt from Ω into X such that ξt (ω) = tξ(ω) + (1 − t)T (ω, ξt (ω)) for each ω ∈ Ω (ii) T has a random fixed point if and only if {ξt (ω)} is bounded as t → 0 for each ω ∈ Ω In this case, {ξt } converges strongly to some random fixed point ξ ∗ of T such that ξ ∗ is the unique random solution in RF (T ) to the variational . and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Random approximation with weak contrac- tion random operators and a random fixed point theorem for nonexpansive random. conditions that nonexpansive ran- dom self-mapping has a random fixed point are obtained. By introducing a random iteration process with weak contraction random operator, we obtain a convergence theorem. Provisional PDF corresponds to the article as it appeared upon acceptance. Fully formatted PDF and full text (HTML) versions will be made available soon. Random approximation with weak contraction random